Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Manila boosts agricultural ties with Israel

The move follows a meeting between the Philippine undersecretary for agriculture and Jerusalem’s ambassador.

An IsraAID worker tests water quality in Negros, Philippines. Photo by Sunshine Escaro.
An IsraAID worker tests water quality in Negros, Philippines. Photo by Sunshine Escaro.

The Philippine government is expanding its partnership with Israel to strengthen the archipelagic country’s agricultural sector.

The move follows a meeting between Philippine Senior Undersecretary for Agriculture Domingo Panganiban and Israeli Ambassador to Manila Ilan Fluss on July 31, during which they discussed collaborative projects to enhance bilateral training, internships and other professional exchanges.

The meeting also focused on enhancing market access of Philippine fresh pineapples and mangoes, the import of Hass avocado planting materials, technical cooperation in local laboratories and the development of a large-scale dairy farm using Israeli technology.

Fluss invited Panganiban and other officials to join Agritech 2023, the largest agricultural technology event in Israel, which is set to take place in Tel Aviv in October.

In June, Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen visited Manila in the first such trip by Jerusalem’s top diplomat in over five decades.

The Israeli foreign minister met with the Philippines’ President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. and Foreign Minister Enrique Manalo, holding a bilateral meeting with the latter to expand business and trade relations.

Speaking to local authority leaders, the Israeli premier said bold military decisions changed the regional balance of power and averted existential threats.
“Here is one more institution of government in Canada, one of our six national museums, again failing the Jewish community, leading to a rupture in the Jewish community,” Mark Berlin told JNS.
Peter James Bloomfield allegedly wrote online threats to kill FBI agents and “blow up the White House,” while investigators say he also made antisemitic threats in his posts.
Tarek Bazrouk was sentenced to 17 months in prison in October 2025 after attacking three Jewish individuals at different pro-Israel demonstrations in New York.
The Center for Strategic and International Studies’ estimate of between $34 to $42 billion closely matched the results of a separate study by the American Enterprise Institute.
“I will be one of the Jewish members of Congress most willing to stand up for Palestinian human rights,” he told the crowd at his victory party in Brooklyn.
Benny Gantz, JNS editor-in-chief Jonathan S. Tobin, Gilad Erdan, Mosab Hassan Yousef, Nissim Black and leading voices in security, diplomacy, media, law and Jewish communal affairs headline the summit’s third day in Jerusalem.